Hurling Blanka

3.4K posts

Hurling Blanka banner
Hurling Blanka

Hurling Blanka

@AdultHitter

Just a big green guy, hurling through space

Katılım Ekim 2025
704 Takip Edilen97 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Hurling Blanka
Hurling Blanka@AdultHitter·
I’m starting a political movement who’s sole platform is to air drop Sabrina Carpenter in the middle of either Mumbai or Mogadishu (we will flip a coin) and it will be filmed live on Kick
English
0
0
1
92
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
PS
PS@psanix·
@ducksays bro just live life. Especially music is something you can live forever. We are all saturated with the influence of social networks in the eternal pursuit of money. Although the end is the same for everyone
English
2
7
1.3K
193.6K
Hurling Blanka
Hurling Blanka@AdultHitter·
Some right wing accounts on this site are very, VERY uncool.
English
0
0
1
21
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
Insider Wire
Insider Wire@InsiderWire·
#BREAKING: Pete Hegseth says “we’ve decided to share the ocean with Iran, we gave them the bottom half.”
English
204
627
10.6K
889.5K
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
🚩
🚩@follacamiones24·
Como me siento habiéndome metido a otra carrera y q la gente de mi clase sea del 2007
Español
61
1.1K
24.1K
644.8K
Hurling Blanka
Hurling Blanka@AdultHitter·
@0x49fa98 Also retarded. One guy saying his testosterone dropped after taking magic mushrooms literally means jack shit. You’re just chasing the conclusions you want.
English
0
0
1
114
Zero HP Lovecraft
Zero HP Lovecraft@0x49fa98·
I lost respect for bryan johnson when he took mushrooms but if he took them so he could get data to show the world how harmful they are, he has won it all back
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson

Two doses of magic mushrooms degraded my sperm count from the 99.6th percentile to the 77.7th. This may be a first-in-human observation. Context: we ran the most quantified magic mushroom (psilocybin) experiment ever conducted. We were asking if psilocybin is a longevity therapy. After seeing the data, we think it is (see reply post for the experiment summary). Also, like most things biology: the results are complicated. My data suggests that the magic mushrooms (psilocybin) negatively impacted my fertility markers. Before the first psilocybin dose my motile sperm count was at 99.6th percentile for men under 25 years of age, it dropped to 77.7% and partially recovered to 89.3% following the first dose, and second doses, compared to the same age cohort (numbers compare similarly to my age cohort as well). 3 days following my second dose (first dose 25 mg, second dose 28 mg) . Motility: dropped 51% . Total count: almost unchanged, dropped by 2% . Total motile count: dropped 52% . Normal morphology: dropped by 50% 20 days post 2nd dose, the pattern continued, with typical latent effects on total sperm counts Motility: recovered back to -2% of pre-psilocybin baseline: . Total count: dropped by 38%, latent effect. . Total motile count: remained inhibited at -39% of pre-psilocybin baseline, (despite motility normalizing, due to the total count drop) . Morphology normalized to -10% of baseline levels. Reduction in free testosterone might have contributed to the effect. While total serum testosterone increased by 30% 3 days following the 2nd dose (neither FSH or LH were meaningfully affected either), and continued to be at 11% above baseline, SHBG increased by 37%, SHBG binds testosterone and reduces its bioavailability and activity. My free testosterone (direct) showed 24% and 23% drops at 3 and 20 days post 2nd dose. In light of the neuroplastic, well-being, brain reset, and systemic metabolic and anti-inflammatory benefits, the trade-off is probably worth it. Especially considering that the magnitude of inhibition has no meaningful effect on actual fertility (total motile counts above 50 million are still on the safe side). This is a first-in-human observation, to our knowledge there is no published human clinical study demonstrating that psilocybin diminishes male fertility markers. General mechanistic evidence exists for recreational and psychoactive drugs possibly inhibiting fertility markers due to their effects on the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis and general hormonal reset.  Yet no direct evidence for psilocybin or other similar psychedelics inhibiting fertility markers exist. A potential mechanism for the immediate inhibition of motility could involve direct serotonergic signaling in sperm. Human sperm express multiple serotonin receptors, including 5-HT2A, and one recent study found that a 5-HT2A antagonist reduced sperm motility, suggesting that 5-HT2A may regulate motility. Psilocybin is known to bind 5-HT2A with high affinity.

English
39
19
972
62.2K
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
Legacy of Strength
Legacy of Strength@_LOSXqz·
@bryan_johnson Biology is noisy. Serious conclusions require consistency, replication, and control... not just intensity of data.
English
4
2
14
3.2K
Hurling Blanka
Hurling Blanka@AdultHitter·
@nickcammarata This is literally just anecdotal evidence you fucking retard this is one person and there’s no indication that it wasn’t something else
English
0
0
1
643
Nick
Nick@nickcammarata·
more evidence for the mushrooms are trying to make more mushrooms theory. almost everyone i know who has a great mushrooms trip eventually starts planting mushrooms. turns out they also try to make fewer humans
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson

Two doses of magic mushrooms degraded my sperm count from the 99.6th percentile to the 77.7th. This may be a first-in-human observation. Context: we ran the most quantified magic mushroom (psilocybin) experiment ever conducted. We were asking if psilocybin is a longevity therapy. After seeing the data, we think it is (see reply post for the experiment summary). Also, like most things biology: the results are complicated. My data suggests that the magic mushrooms (psilocybin) negatively impacted my fertility markers. Before the first psilocybin dose my motile sperm count was at 99.6th percentile for men under 25 years of age, it dropped to 77.7% and partially recovered to 89.3% following the first dose, and second doses, compared to the same age cohort (numbers compare similarly to my age cohort as well). 3 days following my second dose (first dose 25 mg, second dose 28 mg) . Motility: dropped 51% . Total count: almost unchanged, dropped by 2% . Total motile count: dropped 52% . Normal morphology: dropped by 50% 20 days post 2nd dose, the pattern continued, with typical latent effects on total sperm counts Motility: recovered back to -2% of pre-psilocybin baseline: . Total count: dropped by 38%, latent effect. . Total motile count: remained inhibited at -39% of pre-psilocybin baseline, (despite motility normalizing, due to the total count drop) . Morphology normalized to -10% of baseline levels. Reduction in free testosterone might have contributed to the effect. While total serum testosterone increased by 30% 3 days following the 2nd dose (neither FSH or LH were meaningfully affected either), and continued to be at 11% above baseline, SHBG increased by 37%, SHBG binds testosterone and reduces its bioavailability and activity. My free testosterone (direct) showed 24% and 23% drops at 3 and 20 days post 2nd dose. In light of the neuroplastic, well-being, brain reset, and systemic metabolic and anti-inflammatory benefits, the trade-off is probably worth it. Especially considering that the magnitude of inhibition has no meaningful effect on actual fertility (total motile counts above 50 million are still on the safe side). This is a first-in-human observation, to our knowledge there is no published human clinical study demonstrating that psilocybin diminishes male fertility markers. General mechanistic evidence exists for recreational and psychoactive drugs possibly inhibiting fertility markers due to their effects on the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis and general hormonal reset.  Yet no direct evidence for psilocybin or other similar psychedelics inhibiting fertility markers exist. A potential mechanism for the immediate inhibition of motility could involve direct serotonergic signaling in sperm. Human sperm express multiple serotonin receptors, including 5-HT2A, and one recent study found that a 5-HT2A antagonist reduced sperm motility, suggesting that 5-HT2A may regulate motility. Psilocybin is known to bind 5-HT2A with high affinity.

English
33
48
1.7K
152.6K
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
Serf
Serf@TheRoyalSerf·
Serf tweet media
ZXX
22
124
3.7K
62K
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
Serf
Serf@TheRoyalSerf·
Serf tweet media
ZXX
50
23
831
33.9K
Hurling Blanka retweetledi
just business
just business@OneWordPowerful·
just business tweet mediajust business tweet media
ZXX
32
799
24.8K
388.5K